I went through the last several filings to see when and where Berkshire uses the word “restructuring”.
Here’s what I found:
2023
Q1 – 0 mentions
Q2 – 0 mentions
Q3 – 0 mentions
Q4 – 2× in Manufacturing, Service & Retailing (MSR) section
2024
Q1 – 1× in MSR
Q2 – 2× in MSR (Other building products businesses & apparel businesses)
Q3 – 2× in MSR (Same as Q2)
Q4 – Duracell – 2× mentions (~$2B annual revenue)
2025
Q1 – Lubrizol(~6.5B annual revenue) & Fruit of the Loom(~5B annual revenue)
Lubrizol: Restructuring charges + lower volumes/prices drove a 25.8% earnings drop.
Fruit of the Loom: Benefits from restructuring efforts helped offset weakness elsewhere.
Q2 – Lubrizol(~6.5B annual revenue) & Fruit of the Loom(~5B annual revenue)
Lubrizol: Volumes/prices down; Q1 restructuring charges still cited.
Consumer products: Revenue decline at Fruit of the Loom (–11.7%) partly linked to business restructurings.
Quick Observations
The term “restructuring” is absent in 2023 until Q4.
Frequency picked up in 2024, mainly tied to MSR segment businesses.
In 2025, Lubrizol and Fruit of the Loom are the recurring names.
Open Questions
Is this the kind of operational work Greg Abel can directly influence? Could these restructuring efforts reflect his more hands-on management approach in certain subsidiaries?
Why were there no similar mentions of restructuring or optimisation in past Berkshire reports?
Is it that Buffett didn’t care to highlight it?
Or is it now being mentioned to show they are actively cutting inefficiencies?
Anyone here have a view on this disclosure?